The Programme
FIRST® LEGO® League shows young people what it means to be an engineer and work with STEM skills and subjects, but focuses on practical, hands-on learning, so they are doing, not watching. FIRST® LEGO® League Explore is designed for 6-9 year-olds and it's an exciting, non-competitive STEM challenge that rapidly develops teamwork, design, programming, digital and communication skills.
Each year a theme relevant to the world around them is chosen as a focus for the children’s work. The teams research the topic, displaying their ideas on a team poster, build a LEGO® model and programme one part to move using LEGO® Education SPIKE Essential. Teams will then prepare to share their work and celebrate what they have discovered with a team of reviewers and other local teams at a FIRST® LEGO® League Explore Festival.
FIRST® LEGO® League Explore Class Pack is an ‘in house’ version of the globally recognised FIRST® LEGO® League Explore programme. It gives you the opportunity, resources and guidance to run and deliver the programme within your curriculum time.
What you can do
Teachers and coaches are fully supported with comprehensive resources available to download on the IET Teacher Resources webpage, training videos, digital assets and support.
You can sign up here, and if you're in a location with funding, complete the 30 Day Challenge to get grant funding to cover all the costs associated with delivering the programme in your school or community group. The team at Learnit (Ireland) or the IET (UK) will support you through the process.
The Programme
FIRST® LEGO® League shows young people what it means to be an engineer and work with STEM skills and subjects, but focuses on practical, hands-on learning, so they are doing, not watching. FIRST® LEGO® League Explore is designed for 6-9 year-olds and it's an exciting, non-competitive STEM challenge that rapidly develops teamwork, design, programming, digital and communication skills.
Each year a theme relevant to the world around them is chosen as a focus for the children’s work. The teams research the topic, displaying their ideas on a team poster, build a LEGO® model and programme one part to move using LEGO® Education SPIKE Essential. Teams will then prepare to share their work and celebrate what they have discovered with a team of reviewers and other local teams at a FIRST® LEGO® League Explore Festival.
FIRST® LEGO® League Explore Class Pack is an ‘in house’ version of the globally recognised FIRST® LEGO® League Explore programme. It gives you the opportunity, resources and guidance to run and deliver the programme within your curriculum time.
What you can do
Teachers and coaches are fully supported with comprehensive resources available to download on the IET Teacher Resources webpage, training videos, digital assets and support.
You can sign up here, and if you're in a location with funding, complete the 30 Day Challenge to get grant funding to cover all the costs associated with delivering the programme in your school or community group. The team at Learnit (Ireland) or the IET (UK) will support you through the process.
Today we presented our Lego creations along with 3 other classes in the school - all of our hard work certainly paid off!!
The funding we received allowed us to purchase 10 sets of the Spike Essential Kit as well as the Cargo Connect sets.
Our school has never had access to anything like this before and it was totally new for both children and teachers alike. The opportunities for learning that it gave the children surpassed all of our expectations! It encouraged the children to use their critical thinking, creativity and team work as well as exposing them to coding (something that they're pros at now but had no previous experience), geography, environmental awareness and engineering to name a few!
The children's parents and the local town mayor came in today to see the fantastic projects the pupils created. Their confidence and ability to explain their creation and it's programming was just amazing to see and it made all of the times of trial and error so worthwhile! The children were presented with Lego medals to top it all off :)
As we are a disadvantaged school, there are children who attended that would never have had the opportunity to experience coding or even Lego at home, and because of the funding we have received , they now have a new understanding and interest in both.
We are very grateful and thankful for the learning opportunities and fun that the funding has given us and will continue to give us in the future.
The children are absolutely loving the Lego programme so far!
For most of the boys and girls it's their first time coding. However, they are quickly learning the skill and having a lot of fun in the process!
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Action Plan
So we finally were all able to come together and meet in person! Unfortunately, between Covid-19 cases and some waiting for PCR results we haven't all been together in a while but we got there in the end!
Firstly, I would like to outline why this project will be of benefit to our school community.
We work in a school that primarily has children coming from disadvantaged backgrounds. Many of our pupils come from homes where both parents are unemployed, financially unstable and have a negative outlook on school. We aim to develop every child on a holistic level and for a lot of our disadvantaged children, we, the teachers, are often the key to new experiences and opportunities that they would never get at home.
The school has a number of initiatives to aid these pupils such as free lunches, access to different sports and drama activities, homework club, 10 in a row (promotes being in school for 10 consecutive days and to move away from the pattern of missing days and early school leaving).These initiatives are fantastic, but we feel a Lego League will really benefit a large cohort of children.
There has been a big push on STEM in our school in the past year. My colleague, Catherine Troy (running the league for the older classes) is a STEM coordinator and she has done an amazing job at creating a plan in which we can incorporate STEM into our teaching. We have been amazed at the positive reaction the children have had towards it. They are thinking outside of the box and using skills and problem solving techniques that we just wouldn’t have drawn out from them through our regular teaching.
Because of this, I think the Lego League will really take things a step further. We haven’t had much experience with programming except for ‘Scratch’ on the iPads and it seemed to lack purpose for a lot of the pupils. The fact that Lego League will take a topic of relevance to the world around them and give them a focus to create a model, a moving aspect and proceed to present it will equip our children with invaluable skills and more importantly – experiences. As I mentioned, unemployment and a negative outlook on school coming from the home setting is instilled in a lot of our children’s minds. Initiatives like Lego League will give these children the taste of what it might like to be an engineer, or what it might like to be a programmer and it is here we feel we can make a difference to our pupil’s lives.
If granted, the seed funding will be placed in the school’s bank account and all receipts will be kept for both our principal and the Change X team. We have decided to choose a team from each class from 1st and 2nd (6 in total from both streams) and within those teams we will ensure our targeted children are included.
We will work together to plan what equipment we need to purchase. Today we said we think it would be sensible to buy over time and not all at once to see what equipment works well and what doesn’t/too much/need more of something. Our aim however, is to ensure there is an adequate set for each class so we don’t have to swap or rotate.
We have an excellent, whole school Covid plan that we have been following since September 2020. Our children sit in pods meaning they are with the same pupils each day from one term to the next. In order to be Covid compliant, we will ensure the teams are within the same pods to ensure they remain with their close contacts.